Note on Table Top Injection : High Energy Injection Inside the Mirrors (open access)

Note on Table Top Injection : High Energy Injection Inside the Mirrors

"High energy injection into Table Top is discussed for the case in which the ion sources are to be located inside the mirrors in the mirror region. Two typical ion source geometries are considered. maximum time intervals available for injection indicated are on the order of 7 to 25 microseconds."
Date: August 26, 1955
Creator: Hiskes, J. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Theoretical Investigation of the Effect of a Target Seeker Sensitive to Pitch Attitude on the Dynamic Stability and Response Characteristics of a Supersonic Canard Missile Configuration (open access)

A Theoretical Investigation of the Effect of a Target Seeker Sensitive to Pitch Attitude on the Dynamic Stability and Response Characteristics of a Supersonic Canard Missile Configuration

Report presenting a theoretical investigation of the longitudinal dynamic characteristics of an automatically stabilized supersonic canard missile configuration with a target seeker sensitive to changes in pitch altitude. Variables explored include seeker gain, time delay, and non-linearities, including dead spots in the seeker.
Date: August 26, 1952
Creator: Gates, Ordway B., Jr. & Schy, Albert A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dissolution of Power Reactor Fuel Cores (open access)

Dissolution of Power Reactor Fuel Cores

Report discussing the dissolution of simulated fuel cores. Equipment and procedures are discussed along with significant characteristics of the core materials.
Date: August 26, 1960
Creator: Blaine, H. T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Photographic study of combustion in a rocket engine I : variation in combustion of liquid oxygen and gasoline with seven methods of propellant injection (open access)

Photographic study of combustion in a rocket engine I : variation in combustion of liquid oxygen and gasoline with seven methods of propellant injection

From Summary: "Motion pictures at camera speeds up to 3000 frames per second were taken of the combustion of liquid oxygen and gasoline in a 100-pound-thrust rocket engine. The engine consisted of thin contour and injection plates clamped between two clear plastic sheets forming a two-dimensional engine with a view of the entire combustion chamber and nozzle. A photographic investigation was made of the effect of seven methods of propellant injection on the uniformity of combustion. From the photographs, it was found that the flame front extended almost to the faces of the injectors with most of the injection methods, all the injection systems resulted in a considerable nonuniformity of combustion, and luminosity rapidly decreased in the divergent part of the nozzle."
Date: August 26, 1948
Creator: Bellman, Donald R. & Humphrey, Jack C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Forces and pitching moments on an aspect-ratio-3.1 wing-body combination at Mach numbers from 2.5 to 3.5 and sublimation studies of the effect of single-elements roughness on the boundary-layer flow (open access)

Forces and pitching moments on an aspect-ratio-3.1 wing-body combination at Mach numbers from 2.5 to 3.5 and sublimation studies of the effect of single-elements roughness on the boundary-layer flow

Report presenting lift, drag, and pitching-moment characteristics for a wing-body combination for a range of Mach numbers. The wing had an aspect ratio of 3.1, a sweepback of the leading edge of 19.1 degrees, a taper ratio of 0.39, and a biconvex profile with a thickness of 3 percent of the chord. Results regarding aerodynamic characteristics and visual-flow studies are provided.
Date: August 26, 1958
Creator: Hopkins, Edward J.; Keating, Stephen J., Jr. & Muhl, Richard R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental investigation of the effect of yaw on rates of heat transfer to transverse circular cylinders in a 6500-foot-per-second hypersonic air stream (open access)

Experimental investigation of the effect of yaw on rates of heat transfer to transverse circular cylinders in a 6500-foot-per-second hypersonic air stream

Report describing equipment that can be used to shock-compress air by helium to 3660 degrees Rankine to generate a 6500-foot-per-second air stream with a flow duration of 40 milliseconds. The influence of yaw on rates of heat transfer to the same circular cylinders was investigated at angles of yaw up to 70 degrees.
Date: August 26, 1958
Creator: Cunningham, Bernard E. & Kraus, Samuel
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flight Investigation of a Full-Scale Aircraft Ejector with Various Spacing Ratios and Correlation with Small-Scale Tests (open access)

Flight Investigation of a Full-Scale Aircraft Ejector with Various Spacing Ratios and Correlation with Small-Scale Tests

Memorandum presenting a flight investigation to determine the thrust and pumping characteristics of a family of aircraft exhaust ejectors. Information was obtained on the variation of these characteristics with changes in engine power, flight Mach number, and ejector spacing ratio, and these results were compared to small-scale tests. Results were also obtained showing how a swinging survey probe can be used as a device for calibrating a tail-pipe pressure probe for the measurement of thrust and air flow.
Date: August 26, 1958
Creator: Havill, C. Dewey & Wingrove, Rodney C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of a Tilting-Wing Vertical-Take-Off-and-Landing Jet Airplane Model in Hovering and Transition Flight (open access)

Investigation of a Tilting-Wing Vertical-Take-Off-and-Landing Jet Airplane Model in Hovering and Transition Flight

Report presenting the results of an investigation of the dynamic stability and controllability of a proposed supersonic-cruise, vertical-take-off-and-landing airplane configuration with a tilting wing and engines. The configuration tested was found to have satisfactory take-off, landing, and hovering characteristics. Information about transition flight, including stability and control characteristics, is provided.
Date: August 26, 1958
Creator: Kirby, Robert H. & Hassell, James L., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of air-fuel spray and flame formation in a compression-ignition engine (open access)

Effects of air-fuel spray and flame formation in a compression-ignition engine

"High-speed motion pictures were taken at the rate of 2,500 frames per second of the fuel spray and flame formation in the combustion chamber of the NACA combustion apparatus. The compression ratio was 13.2 and the speed 1,500 revolutions per minute. An optical indicator was used to record the time-pressure relationship in the combustion chamber. The air-fuel ratio was varied from 10.4 to 365. The results showed that as the air-fuel ratio was increased definite stratification of the charge occurred in the combustion chamber even though moderate air flow existed. The results also showed the rate of vapor diffusion to be relatively slow" (p. 119).
Date: August 26, 1935
Creator: Rothrock, A. M. & Waldron, C. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The NACA Apparatus for Studying the Formation and Combustion of Fuel Sprays and the Results From Preliminary Tests (open access)

The NACA Apparatus for Studying the Formation and Combustion of Fuel Sprays and the Results From Preliminary Tests

"This report describes the apparatus as designed and constructed at the Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory, for studying the formation and combustion of fuel sprays under conditions closely simulating those occurring in a high-speed compression-ignition engine. The apparatus consists of a single-cylinder modified test engine, a fuel-injection system so designed that a single charge of fuel can be injected into the combustion chamber of the engine, an electric driving motor, and a high-speed photographic apparatus. The cylinder head of the engine has a vertical-disk form of combustion chamber whose sides are glass windows" (p. 549).
Date: August 26, 1931
Creator: Rothrock, A. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Investigation at Subsonic and Supersonic Speeds of a Fighter Model Employing a Low-aspect-ratio Unswept Wing and a Horizontal Tail Mounted Well above the Wing Plane - Lateral and Directional Stability (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Investigation at Subsonic and Supersonic Speeds of a Fighter Model Employing a Low-aspect-ratio Unswept Wing and a Horizontal Tail Mounted Well above the Wing Plane - Lateral and Directional Stability

The static lateral- and directional-stability characteristics of a high-speed fighter-type airplane, obtained from wind-tunnel tests of a model, are presented. The model consisted of a thin, unswept wing of aspect ratio 2.3 and taper ratio 0.385, a body, and a horizontal tail mounted in a high position on a vertical tail. Rolling-moment, yawing moment, and cross-wind-force coefficients are presented for a range of sideslip angles of -5 deg. to +5 deg, for Mach numbers of 0.90, 1.45, and 1.90. Data are presented which show the effects on the lateral and directional stability of: (1) component parts of the complete model, (2) modification of the empennage so as to provide different heights of the horizontal tail above the wing plane, (3) angle of attack, and (4) dihedral of the wing.
Date: August 26, 1954
Creator: Wetzel, Benton E.
System: The UNT Digital Library